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Department
Chair: Kristofer Eitrheim – (563) 333-6255
Faculty
Advisor: Dr. Corinne Johnson – (563) 333-6427
Newsletter
Editor: Daniel Sheridan, SAU Junior, SAUTheatreNews@Yahoo.com
Contributing
Journalist: Julie Arensdorf, SAU Freshman / Jenny
Stodd, SAU sophomore
=========================================================
MR.
DIRECTOR, IF YOU PLEASE….
“There’s
no business like show business”—that’s what
St. Ambrose junior Daniel Sheridan discovered at the
Region V Kennedy Center American College Theatre
Festival this January. The Festival, in which
over 700 college students participated, is held each
year with an opportunity for schools across the
nation to share their theatrical talents. This
year, Region V held its festival in Denver, Colorado
at Denver University.
Sheridan
already knew he would be attending the Festival in
Colorado. Last February, he was nominated to
perform in the Irene Ryan Scholarship Competition
for playing Stanley in SAU’s Brighton Beach
Memoirs last winter. In September, Sheridan
stepped off the stage and gave directing a whirl,
choosing Steven Dietz’s Private Eyes to direct in
SAU’s studio theatre. At the show’s
completion, faculty advisor Dr. Cory Johnson
approached Sheridan about the possibility of
directing a 10-Minute Play at KC/ACTF. With
much anticipation, Sheridan agreed, and started the
process.
Dr.
Johnson wrote a letter of recommendation for
Sheridan, and he, in turn, wrote a cover letter to
go with his directing resume. “I knew I
could represent St. Ambrose well,” he commented.
A selection committee in charge of the 10-Minute
Play Festival finally chose student directors from
the eight states in the region, and in December,
Sheridan was notified that he would be one of them.
When he found out, Sheridan claims, “I was
astonished, because I don’t have a lot of
experience in directing to show on my resume.”
Experience
or none, Sheridan went into the process full speed
ahead. He received the script, titled “While
We’re Stopped” by Blake Hogue, a senior at the
University of Minnesota-Duluth, about a week later.
After reading the script, he was in contact through
e-mail with the playwright, and was able to do some
preparation before the Festival in January.
On
the first night of the Festival, auditions were held
for the 10-Minute Plays. Students read from
three different scripts entered in the festival.
“Casting was amazingly difficult,” Sheridan
explained, “because we saw over 100 people in
three hours, all reading from the same scripts!”
After a tiring evening, Sheridan and Hogue had
chosen a strong cast for their show.
The
next day, rehearsals began. The director was
given only one hour each day to rehearse with the
cast. “It was great because it worked your
directing and acting muscles to the extreme,”
Sheridan noticed. “You really had to
condense your process and focus on what was
important.”
Focus
he did! Sheridan spent numerous hours outside
of rehearsal concentrating on the blocking and other
preparation needed when directing. On Friday
morning, January 23rd, after one
technical rehearsal, the 10-Minute Play Festival was
presented. Eight plays were performed, and
“While We’re Stopped” was last in the program.
The audience laughed and groaned and enjoyed the
play through the final moment. In a ballot
passed out in the programs, students were allowed to
pick a play for the “People’s Choice Award”
(a.k.a. the “Al Gore Award”), and “While
We’re Stopped” was chosen. At the Friday
night awards ceremony, St. Ambrose students cheered
as Daniel Sheridan took the stage while receiving
the position of first alternate to the Kennedy
Center in honor of his directing talent, behind Sara
K. Armstrong of the University of Kansas, the third
year graduate student who took first place to the
Kennedy Center. “I jumped straight out of my
seat”, he says with a smile. “I was so
excited.” St. Ambrose congratulates Sheridan
on his award and continued directing success!
/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/
ROCKY
MOUNTAIN HIGH
The
St. Ambrose Theatre Department didn’t climb any
mountains last week, but their trip to Colorado was
still a success! Twenty students traveled to
Denver on Sunday, January 18, for the Region V
Kennedy Center/American College Theatre Festival
held at Denver University. Region V consists
of schools from Iowa, Minnesota, Kansas, Colorado,
Missouri, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Nebraska.
The Festival, in which over 700 college students
participated, is held each year with an opportunity
for schools across the nation to share their
theatrical talents.
The
very first event, held on Monday, was the Irene Ryan
Scholarship Competition. Irene Ryan was an actor
(playing such roles as Granny in “Beverly
Hillbillies”) who wanted to give students the
opportunity to make a career in theatre.
Nominated students must prepare a combination of a
scene and monologue/scene and song not to exceed
five minutes. Ambrose students Dan Hale,
Daniel Sheridan, Matt Cox, Jeff Hannah, Ted
Stephens, Jill Schmits, Allison Costello, and Chris
Bright were all nominated to compete, and gave
outstanding performances in the preliminary rounds.
A semi-final round and a final round followed,
announcing two winners on Tuesday evening.
The
rest of the week was extremely high-paced.
Students had several options of how to fill their
days. These included theatre workshops and
auditioning for summer stock theatre companies.
Auditions were held for a 10-Minute Play Festival,
and Ambrose students Ted Stephens and Dan Hale were
cast in two of the eight shows. Daniel
Sheridan was chosen a few weeks before the festival
to direct another of these 10-Minute Plays, “While
We’re Stopped”, by Blake Hogue, a senior at the
University of Minnesota-Duluth (see previous
article).
Highlights
of the week were the shows the students attended.
Most of the plays were college productions that were
chosen to perform at the festival through a
selection committee. On Thursday night, a
“Splash” performance was given, starring faculty
members from various schools in the region. St.
Ambrose theatre professor Dr. Cory Johnson performed
a scene from Reckless. There was a catch to
this, however: Dr. Johnson went on with a scene
partner she didn’t know and had never practiced
with. All the scenes were very well done.
St. Ambrose was also very proud to see Hale and
Stephens in the 10-Minute Play Festival, as well as
Sheridan’s directing.
The
festival closed on Friday night with an awards
ceremony, honoring schools and students for their
theatre excellence. St. Ambrose was thrilled
to receive an award for “exceptional ensemble
performance” in last winter’s production of
Brighton Beach Memoirs. Also awarded was
Daniel Sheridan, who received the first alternate
position to the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C.
for his talents in directing.
Though
the car ride was long (14 hours one-way), and the
days were tiring, the St. Ambrose theatre department
and their fearless leaders will no doubt venture out
to the festival next year. Rumor has it
they’ll travel to the “Gateway to the West”,
St. Louis.
OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
Our
Town Performed Right Here in Our Town
Thornton
Wilder’s Our Town will be performed at the Galvin
Fine Arts Center in Allaert Auditorium on Friday,
Feb 20th @ 7:30pm, Saturday, Feb 21st
@ 7:30pm, and Sunday, Feb 22nd @ 3:00pm.
The show will be the first mainstage production of
the second semester at SAU.
Our
Town is a three-act play that studies different
stages in human life; birth, love, marriage and
death. It takes place in a small town in New
Hampshire called Grover’s Corner. It is here
that the simple things in life earn a greater
appreciation, as the trials of a family are followed
through a generation. The final act is set in
a graveyard, with the spirits of the characters who
have passed away understanding in death how
important and simple life truly is.
This
particular main stage show will not be set in the
typical venue, however. Our Town requires a
very minimal amount of set, which freed up Kristofer
Eitrheim, scenic designer, and the rest of the
design team to create a whole new setting that
breaks from the customary Ambrose main stage
production. The performance will still be in
Allaert Auditorium, but the audience will be seated
on the mainstage surrounding three sides of the
playing area. This is known as a thrust stage
and the new space will provide a more intimate
setting, seating about 250 people. “The
vastness of our stage does not serve the piece,”
said Dr. Corinne Johnson, director. “This
reconfiguration sizes down the entire community so
we can be transported not on a grand scale but
rather by grand emotion.”
“If
you are involved or interested in theatre at all,
Our Town is a fairly important play of the 20th
century,” said Eitrheim. “It takes a
look at people and our place in this world, which is
culturally heightened given present day
tribulations.”
Dates
Friday
Feb. 20 @ 7:30pm
Saturday
Feb 21 @ 7:30pm
Sunday
Feb 22 @ 3:00pm
Tickets
*Reserve
tickets at the Galvin Box Office (563) 333-6251
*$10
for adults, $8 for Seniors/Faculty/Staff/Non-SAU
students, $0 for current SAU students with a valid
student ID
*Seating
is limited. Reserve tickets today.
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
MAINSTAGE
AUDITIONS FOR RUMORS!
Neil
Simon’s only farce, Rumors, is a play that pokes
fun at upper-class society and how their trivial
problems send them into tizzies. Through the spread
of rumors, gunshots and alcohol, they all find
themselves trapped in crazy situations.
Michael Kennedy will direct this upcoming show,
which will take place on the Galvin Fine Arts
Center’s Allaert Auditorium (Mainstage).
“I picked Rumors for its pacing element,”
explained Kennedy. “It has five very bright
couples that will be challenging to make unique and
quirky. I want the actors to bring a lot to
the characters themselves and experiment.”
Roles:
5
Men
5
Women
Audition
Dates:
Wed.
Feb. 4th, 3-5 pm - Allaert Auditorium (Mainstage)
Thurs.
Feb 5th, 5-7pm -Hut III
Fri.
Feb 6th, 12:30-3:30 – Allaert
Auditorium (Mainstage)
*A
one-minute monologue is recommended but not
required.
*You
may audition for Rumors and Baby with the Bathwater.
Do not feel inhibited.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Senior
Salute
Name:
Eric James Behnke
Hometown:
Dubuque, IA
Major(s)
& Minor(s): Theatre and Computer
Science major
Previous
Productions at SAU: Stage Manager (SM) for
“James and the Giant Peach,” Props Master for
The Lady’s not for Burning, SM for Lonely Planet,
SM for “Winnie-the-Pooh,” Lighting Design (LD)
for Sylvan Slough, Angus in Macbeth, SM for Gypsy,
LD for Brighton Beach Memoirs, LD for “Art,” SM
for My Favorite Year, LD for “Pippi Longstocking,”
SM for Baby with the Bathwater, and LD for Rumors.
Additional shows not listed.
Favorite
SAU experience? “Being the stage manager
for “James and the Giant Peach” my freshman
year. As a freshman, it was really cool that
they allowed me to take over the production by
myself.”
Favorite
role? “‘Pippi Longstocking’ because
the show allowed me unlimited creative potential.”
Latest
project? “Stage manager for Baby with
the Bathwater in the Studio Theatre.”
Dream
job? “Stage manager on Broadway, any
company.”
Favorite
Actor/Actress? “I love Sean Connery.
Always have.”
Favorite
quote? “Either do it professionally or
go play soccer!”
- Michael Kennedy during My Favorite Year
Favorite
word? “Antidistablishantarianism.”
Least
favorite word? “Impossible.”
If
Heaven exists, what would you like God to say?
“You are forgiven.”
&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
An
American Thespian in London
Theatre
and London, can one ask for a better combination?
London is a mecca for theatre and a place that
continues to thrive, with its larger-than-Broadway
West End and its experimental fringe. It is
with this in mind that the SAU Theatre Department,
in correlation with the Study Abroad program, has
created a May Interim course that lets the students
study the culture and the theatre, while picking up
3 credit hours on the side.
The
course and trip to London will be from May 10 –
29, 2004. This includes one-week on the SAU
campus studying the literature, culture and history
with theatre professor Dr. Cory Johnson and English
professor Dr. Owen Rogal. Following this is a
two week stay in England that includes with the cost
shows at Shakespeare’s Globe Theatre, a workshop
with the Globe players, London’s West End
Theatres, the National Theatre, London’s Theatre
Museum, the British Museum, a trip to
Stratford-upon-Avon, backstage tours of numerous
professional theatres, and eight plays. “In
the past years students have seen up to 14 plays in
the 14 days,” commented Dr. Johnson.
The
weeklong class prior to the trip is made even more
interesting with the professor’s backgrounds
varying in literature and theatre. “We
really compliment each other well,” said Dr. Rogal.
“We’ve worked together on this project for the
past few years with great success.” This
will be the department’s third trip to London.
On
a previous London trip, SAU students watched the
premiere of The Lieutenant of Inishmore by Martin
McDonagh, an up and coming Irish playwright.
After the show, students bumped into McDonagh at a
pub and shared a drink with him.
Seniors
Eric Behnke and Dan Hale have attended the trip
before and are once again signed on to go.
“Last time I went it was an amazing experience,”
shared Behnke. Hale added, “There is no
experience quite like going to a city with such
great theatre.”
You
do not have to be a student to participate in the
trip. With tickets for the eight shows,
airfare, lodging, breakfasts, theatre workshops, and
three credit hours provided in the cost, the interim
runs at approximately $3500. If you are
interested, please contact Dr. Johnson
(563-333-6427) or Jon Stauff (563-333-6389) as soon
as possible. The deadline has already passed,
but seats are still available for latecomers.
“My
family says London ruined my life,” joked Dr.
Rogal. “When I come home, I want to fly
straight back. London is an amazingly
cosmopolitan place, even compared to NYC. It
is cutting edge in classic and contemporary theatre.
London has history and culture imbedded in the
society, which makes it an amazingly beautiful
place.”
*****************************************************************
STUDIO
AUDITIONS FOR BABY WITH THE BATHWATER!
Christopher
Durang’s Baby With the Bathwater tells the
hilarious story of a couple who try to raise a
child, without the slightest idea of how to do it
correctly. “We have parts ranging from
leading roles down to only a single scene,”
director Stephanie Massick said. As a live
person will play the role of the baby, the bassinet
is going to be built so that an actor or actress can
fit inside. The director knows this is a busy
time for those involved in theatre, “I want to
work with people’s schedules so that they can be
involved in shows both upstairs and in the studio at
the same time.”
Performance
Dates: March 26-28
Roles:
4-9
Women
2-4
Men
Auditions
Dates:
Wed.
Feb. 4, 5-7pm
Thurs.
Feb. 5, 4-6pm
Fri.
Feb. 6, 3-5pm (callbacks)
*Auditions
held in the Studio Theatre
*Scripts
available in the Galvin Box office for check-out
*You
will be asked to read from the script. No
monologues required.
*You
may audition for both Baby with the Bathwater and
Rumors. Do not feel inhibited.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Freshman
Spotlight
Name:
Claire Marie Richards
Hometown:
Chicago, IL
Major(s)
& Minor(s): English and Theatre major, with
Women’s Studies minor.
Previous
Productions: My Favorite Year in the
ensemble, “Pippi Longstocking” as Mr. Neilson
(the monkey), Piece of my Heart as Mary Joe,
Wanda’s Visit as Wanda, and director of Top of 16.
Why
did you come to SAU? “I like the idea of
a small campus with a small teacher to student ratio
(1 to 15). Ambrose was also close to home,
without being too close.”
Favorite
SAU experience? “Being a monkey and a
teacup. It doesn’t get much better than
that!”
Latest
project? “Preparing to audition for Baby
with the Bathwater and Rumors.”
Dream
job? “A professional actress, as cliché
as that may be. I would also love to be a
speech writer for politicians.”
Favorite
Actor/Actress? “The guys? That would
fall between Kevin Spacey and Edward Norton.
The actress? Megan Mullahy from Will and
Grace.
Favorite
quote? “And in the end the love you take
is equal to the love you make.” -The Beatles
Favorite
word? “Prodigious.” (Meaning –
extraordinary or marvelous)
Least
favorite word? “I love all words in
their entirety and cannot discriminate.”
If
Heaven exists, what would you like God to say?
“And the award goes to…”
@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@
A
Funny Thing Happened at the November Wedding
The
marriage of SAU alumni Dave Furness (’97) and Kim
Kurtenbach (’96) took place where the two met
at SAU’s Galvin Fine Arts Center’s Allaert
Auditorium during a production of Romeo and Juliet
in 1996. The (wedding) production involving
many SAU alumni and current SAU faculty, took place
on November 8, 2003. Kurtenbach wanted to get
married someplace of personal significance, and the
couple loves the theatre. She comments, “we
both have many wonderful memories at St. Ambrose.
I met some of the greatest people I will ever know
doing shows on that stage. I feel blessed that
most of them traveled from near and far to rejoin me
on that special day.”
The
stage wedding was no different than putting up a
full production. Cast lists (wedding party,
etc.) had to be chosen, dates discussed, and even
the script had to be written. With the help of
SAU alum Dave Bonde, Kurtenbach wrote the entire
ceremony. The best part of a theatrical
wedding was that it allowed the bride to choose what
she wanted for readings and vocal selections.
Current SAU faculty and staff, Dr. Corinne Johnson,
Kris Eitrheim, and Brad Frazee conducted a 2-hour
rehearsal the day before the wedding, to add light
and sound cues, vocalists and musical numbers.
Kurtenbach remarked, “I am still amazed at how
smoothly and perfectly EVERYTHING went! I am
grateful to everyone at SAU for their collaborative
efforts.”
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Theatre
Around the QCA this Month
Show:
Female Problems
Producer: New
Ground Theatre
Dates:
Feb. 5–7 @ 7:30pm and Feb. 8 @ 2:00pm.
Tickets:
$12, $10 for Students/Seniors. Reservations @
(563) 326-7529.
Location: Rivermont
Collegiate, 1821 Sunset Drive, Bettendorf, IA
Note: SAU
senior Eric Behnke is lighting designer for this show.
Show:
Smokey Joe’s Cafe
Producer: Circa’
21 Dinner Playhouse
Dates: Runs
to March 20. Wed. – Sat. @ 6:00pm.
Sundays @ 4:00pm and
Wed.
matinees @ 11:45am.
Tickets:
$37.50 on weekends, $35 on Wed., and $32.50 on Wed.
matinees.
Dinner/Lunch included. Reservations @ (309)
786-7733.
Location 1828
3rd Ave, Rock Island. Next to
ComedySportz.
Note:
Company owner Denny Hitchcock is a member of the SAU
advisory board.
Show:
ComedySportz
Producer: Circa’
21 Dinner Playhouse
Dates:
Every Friday & Saturday @ 7:00pm.
Tickets:
$10 at door. $8 with reservation. Reservations
@ (309) 786-7733.
Location: 1828
3rd Ave, Rock Island. Next to, but
not in, Circa’ 21.
Note:
Daniel Sheridan, Dan Hale, and Andrew Harvey, all
SAU students, are currently involved at ComedySportz.
To catch them onstage, please give them a call.
Show: The
Secret Garden
Producer:
Davenport’s Jr. Theatre
Dates:
Feb. 28 @ 1:00pm & 3:00pm and Feb. 29 @ 2:00pm
& 4:00pm.
Tickets:
$4 per person at the door.
Location:
Eastern Ave., Davenport, IA. On the Annie
Whitenmeyer Complex in the Mary Nighswander Theatre.
Note:
Jr. Theatre is currently looking for responsible
college students interested in teaching elementary
and intermediate level students about theatre
history, performance, and technique. If
interested in this opportunity, contact Daniel
Sheridan @ (563) 370-5345 for more information.
Show:
An American Daughter
Producer: Augustana
College
Dates:
Feb 6-7 @ 8:00pm, Feb. 8 @ 2:00pm, and Feb. 12-14 @
8:00pm.
Tickets:
$5 General Admission and $4 Seniors/Students.
Location: Augustana
College in Rock Island, IL.
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
Senior
Salute
Name:
Kacie Louise McIntyre
Hometown:
Brimfield, IL
Major(s)
& Minor(s): Spanish Major
Previous
Productions at SAU: Our Town as Mrs.
Gibbs, “Pippi Longstockings” as Mrs. Stettergren,
City of Angels as Big Six, “James and the Giant
Peach” as a townsperson, A Christmas Carol as a
townsperson, and Assistant Director for Gypsy.
Favorite
SAU experience? “City of Angels because
it was a great time and amazing challenge. The
whole cast overcame some tough times and put out a
show we were all very proud of.”
Favorite
role? “Being the Statue of Liberty in
‘James and the Giant Peach.’ I was rolled
out on a platform. It can’t get much better
than that.”
Latest
project? “Mrs. Gibbs in Our Town.”
Dream
job? “Social work involving children
where I am in the capacity to play a big influence
and improve their lives. It is a culmination
of everything I love to do.”
Favorite
Actor/Actress? “Dustin Hoffman.”
Favorite
quote? “Sing as if no one was listening,
dance as if no one was watching, live as if everyday
were your last.”
Favorite
word? “Pleasure.”
Least
favorite word? “Can’t.”
If
Heaven exists, what would you like God to say?
“Thanks for coming.”
{}{}{}{}{}{}{}{}{}{}{}{}{}{}{}{}{}{}{}{}{}{}{}{}{}{}{}{}{}{}{}{}{}{}
Death
of a Salesman to Reunite SAU Alumni
Arthur
Miller’s Death of a Salesman is considered by many
to be one of the most inspiring and evocative works
produced in American dramatic literature. It
is with this moving piece that the Theatre
Department at St. Ambrose University has begun to
reunite its alumni and merge them with current
students and faculty to create a piece of
unforgettable artwork filled with invaluable
experience.
SAU
is proud to have its very own Michael Kennedy
(’60) playing Willy Loman, the tragic lead that is
determined to find success, or die trying.
Kennedy, a professor in communications and theatre
at SAU for the past thirty-four years, is delighted
for the opportunity to play this complex role.
Dr. Corinne Johnson, professor of theatre, is also
slated to play opposite of Kennedy as Linda, Willy
Loman’s wife, and Kristofer Eitrheim, SAU
technical director, will be playing the role of Howard.
Others cast are Eric Holloway (’00) as Happy, Jim
VanSpeybroeck (’60) as Uncle Ben, Kris
Halverson/Skaggs (‘97) as Miss Forsythe, Debbie (Hassi)
Noonan (’98) as Letta, and Joan Zamiska/McCleve
(’94) as The Woman.
Directing
the show will be Ambrose alum, Matthew Speak
(’96). Costuming will be done by SAU alum,
Brian Hemesath (’94). Ted Stephens III (‘
00) will be the stage manager and also in charge of
advertisement, as well as web design. Jon
Pomeroy, former SAU technical director, will provide
the lighting design. Props mistress is
Victoria Fairbrother (’03). Current SAU
students include sophomore Jamie Booher (’06) as
ASM and junior Daniel Sheridan (’05) as assistant
director.
Anyone
who has ever participated with the SAU theatre
department is strongly encouraged to contribute to
this production. If interested, please contact
Cory Johnson (563-333-6427) as soon as possible and
prior to February 15th. Anyone who is
interested in keeping up on the progress of Death of
a Salesman should visit the official website at
www.sau.edu/salesmanproject.com.
At the site you can keep up on the cast,
crew, or even share your favorite memory of Mike
Kennedy himself.
“I
am really thrilled to have this fabulous play be
done on our stage with a cast and crew that can
serve it well,” Dr. Johnson said in closing.
“We want to include as many as we can in this
memorable experience.”
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
SAU
NEWSLETTER: NEXT EDITION
The
newsletter is intended to be sent out on the first
business day of every month. The next issue
will be released on Monday, March 1.
The
March issue will take a featured look at the
upcoming studio show Baby with the Bathwater.
Also, an in-depth story on the scene shop and the
work that goes on downstairs in the Galvin Fine Arts
Center will be disclosed.
To
inquire further about St. Ambrose University and our
offered courses, degrees, events, and staff, visit www.sau.edu for
information. Come check out the SAU Theatre
Website at www.sau.edu/theatre. If interested
in learning more about the Theatre Department,
please contact theatre chair Kristofer Eitrheim by
phone at (563) 333-6255 or e-mail at
EitrheimKristofer@sau.edu.
DO
YOU KNOW ANYONE WHO WOULD LIKE TO BE ADDED TO THE
SAU NEWSLETTER MAILING LIST? If yes, contact
us at SAUTheatreNews@Yahoo.com
and get their names put on our e-mail list. If
you would like to be removed from the mailing list,
please contact us at the same address. Thanks. |